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Especially if the symptoms continue but even if they don't, deep eye pain and nausea warrant investigation. Any ophthalmologist can determine whether your eye pressure is normal, whether you are susceptible to a glaucoma issue, or if there has been inflammation in your eyes. Your primary care doctor can determine whether sinusitis is present. Unfortunately, without an examination, one cannot exclude the more significant conditions.View Thread

It sounds like you may be seeing the meibomian glands along the edge of each eyelid or possibly small calcium deposits just underneath the surface of the eye. These are not styes and will not respond to hot compresses. Indeed, if they don't bother you in any other way but the appearance when you lift your eyelid and look in the mirror, then there may be no need to treat this issue. It is unlikely that these spots would affect your vision.
That being said, as usual, it would take a careful examination by an ophthalmologist to make a definite diagnosis and recommend the proper course of action (or inaction).View Thread

Call the doctor who is prescribing the coumadin and ask about the fastest way to get the coumadin level checked.View Thread

Sometimes uveitis has a cause which can be determined; sometimes not. It can be part of whole body inflammation and can accompany arthritis. Uveitis can be caused by a viral infection inside the eye. Seasonal allergies and contact lens issues (in the absence of an obvious corneal infection) are usually not the cause of the iritis.
The treatment for uveitis affecting the front of your eye is typically steroid eyedrops. It can recur as it has in your case.View Thread

www.aao.org/theeyeshaveit/disturbances/floaters.cfmView Thread

The eyeglass prescription is for very mild nearsightedness and astigmatism. If the glare and halo issues persist even when wearing the glasses, there is possibly an underlying issue with your cornea or natural crystalline lens. No choice but to make additional visits to more and more qualified ophthalmologists until a diagnosis is made. On subsequent eye doctor visits you need to be sure that your corneal topography, corneal epithelium, whole eye aberrometry, and crystalline lens clarity are all carefully checked.View Thread

You definitely need a diagnosis and a treatment plan. You need to see an ophthalmologist and preferably one that has special training in corneal and external diseases.
Go to www.AAO.org and select the tab on top "find an eye MD" and then search for a "cornea/external disease" specialist in your area.View Thread

With that said, if the issue has not resolved its worth getting a diagnosis from an ophthalmologist. On rare occasions there are other problems that look like this but are far more serious.View Thread


In other types of conditions which cause retinal swelling such as after cataract surgery, non-steroidal antiinflammatory drops such as Nevanac are used. However, this is not a usual treatment for central serous chorioretinopathy.View Thread
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